Saturday, October 17, 2020

Ted Cruz Chooses Racism Over Facts. Pathetic.

Ted Cruz Still Bitter For Being Repeatedly Picked Last During Recess Basketball

Imagine a world in which a U.S. Senator deliberately goes out of his way to announce, with a stroke of glee, that because an organization chose to stand against racism, it drove away its American viewership. This synopsis is exactly what the Texas Republican Senator, Ted Cruz, blasted on Twitter when Cruz tweeted, “Not surprising. Personally speaking, this is the first time in years that I haven’t watched a single game in the NBA Finals. #GoWokeGoBroke”. Mark Cuban, the owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, responded to Cruz’s tweet with, “A US Senator with 3 @NBA teams in his state, employing thousands of people and he is rooting for their business to do poorly. This is who you are @tedcruz. Every minute of your life, this is exactly who you are.”

In a year in which mass protests erupted across the U.S., primarily due to multiple innocent unarmed black people being killed by police, the NBA chose to be a guiding light. After Jacob Blake, an unarmed black man, was shot by Kenosha, Wisconsin police, the Milwaukee Bucks boycotted their NBA playoff game which resulted in the rest of the NBA following as well as additional sports across the nation. The players did not choose to cancel the season, but rather worked with the owners to devise a three point plan to help bring an end to police brutality and a greater awareness to systemic racism, which included NBA arenas to be used as polling stations for the 2020 presidential election. The arenas would be utilized as a safe polling place for communities that were significantly hit by COVID-19. In addition, several players conducted their own initiatives to increase civic engagement, such as Lebron James who created the organization “More Than a Vote” that is ensuring there are enough poll workers.

Sad That the NBA Took A Larger Stand Against Racism Than the Federal Government

In light of these great initiatives that both the NBA and players are making to guarantee that people’s votes are able to be made and to be made safely, it’s bewildering that Cruz would find this sort of “wokeness”, a term used, according to dictionary.com, “to describe a person who is alert to injustice in society, especially racism”, to be the sole reason that the NBA Finals had low ratings.

To Ted Cruz’s misfortune the demographics between the 2020 NBA Playoffs and the 2019 NBA Playoffs hardly changed. According to SportsMedia Watch, in 2020 45% of viewers were white and 55% were nonwhite, while in 2019 the percentages were 46% and 54%, respectively. This is hardly an indicator that a certain population was turned off due to the NBA standing against racism (just writing that sentence seems so odd).

There is a much more obvious and substantiated reason for why the NBA playoffs had low ratings – COVID-19. The pandemic forced nearly all major sporting events, apart from the NFL, to alter their seasons. The NBA canceled their regular season in March after Rudy Gobert, a player for the Utah Jazz, tested positive for COVID.  Many other leagues followed suit or postponed the start of their seasons, like Major League Baseball.

The NBA Finals typically has the month of June to themselves, other than regular season baseball. However, with the NBA Finals being conducted four months later, the NBA faced off against Major League Baseball playoffs, NFL, and college football. Yet despite this added competition and despite the 2020 NBA Finals being the lowest rated Finals in NBA history, its first three games rank among the five most watched non-NFL live sporting events since the wave of cancellations took place due to COVID.  

Additionally, the NBA’s downturn was a symptom that all sporting events felt. While the NBA Finals had a 49% decrease in viewership compared to last year, the Stanley Cup Finals saw a 61% decrease and the final round of golf’s U.S. Open had a 56% drop off. MLB’s divisional round of their playoffs saw a decrease of 40% compared to the year prior. While the NFL has seen a decrease, it’s only 10%. College football finally had its first game that reached a 3.0 Nielsen Rating when Tennessee faced Georgia this past weekend.

The 2020 presidential election has also lent a hand in decreasing sports viewership.  MSNBC, CNN, and the fascist news network – Fox News – have all seen a rise in viewership.

Ted Cruz’s illogical fallacy that the NBA Finals’ lack of viewership was a direct consequence of the NBA’s stance against racism, is wholly disproved. The irony is that Ted Cruz’s racist dog whistling is a strategy that his entire Republican Party has been using in 2020 to maintain its slipping hold on power. Rather than face the obvious facts – such as climate change is real - they choose to use baseless premises as the sole reason for certain results. Donald Trump does this better than anyone, especially when he insists that should he lose the election it is because of ballot fraud, not the simple fact that the majority of Americans dislike him.

Ted Cruz represents a state that reelected him by only a few percentage points in 2018 and it is quickly becoming a minority-majority state.  It would be prudent of him to recognize the obvious fact that it is wrong to stand on the side of racism.

 

References

https://www.sportsmediawatch.com/2020/10/nba-playoff-ratings-decline-finals-record-low-sports-viewership/

https://www.sportsmediawatch.com/2020/10/mlb-postseason-ratings-alcs-record-lows-nlcs/

https://www.sportsmediawatch.com/2020/10/college-football-ratings-sec-season-high-viewership/

Thursday, October 8, 2020

The O'Brien Tumor Was Removed, But Was It Too Late?

 

Billy O, Searching For His Draft Picks

Bill O’Brien lasted longer as the general manager of the Houston Texans than Kim Kardashian lasted married to Kris Humphries. That’s probably far from Bill O’Brien’s mind as this week he was terminated from his duties as both the Texans’ head coach and general manager. Bill O’Brien’s firing was a culmination of a man who gained so much power, he was unable to point the finger when the team started the season 0-4. The question really becomes which Bill O’Brien ended his tenure in the Lone Star state – Bill O’Brien The Head Coach, Bill O’Brien The General Manager, or Bill O’Brien The Man?

Part 1: Bill O’Brien: The Head Coach

The Texans hired Bill O’Brien in 2014 after he completed his second year as Penn State’s head coach. Although the Texans were a 2-14 team the year prior, they held the first overall pick and used that to pick up stellar defensive end, Jadeveon Clowney, who would then lineup with the already stellar, J.J. Watt.  The Bill O’Brien turnaround was on as his team went 9-7. O’Brien would go on to a 52-48 record as the leader of the Texans, win the AFC South title (a mostly dismal division) four out of his six full seasons, and only had one losing season when his 2017 team finished 4-12.

Easy to tell which team scored zero points

Despite his ability to turnaround a depleted team, it more or less felt that O’Brien’s coaching abilities plateaued, especially when his team’s entered the playoffs. In each of his four playoff appearances his teams were unable to get over the “hump.” In 2016, at home, Bill O’Brien’s team was the first team in a decade to be shutout in a playoff game – 30-0 against the wildcard Chiefs. 2016’s Divisional Round, against the AFC’s power team, the New England Patriots, O’Brien’s team failed to be competitive and lost 34-16. This game was to be the “great leap forward” as the Texans would overthrow the Patriots and assert their dominance across the AFC. Instead, the Houston Texans looked more like a paper tiger who were able to wallop on their weak AFC South opponents but could not muster the right stuff against the Patriots. The 2019 AFC Wild Card game was another no show for O’Brien’s team as his, on paper, favored team was trampled at home by their division rival, and less superior, Indianapolis Colts – 21-7. Finally, and where the train really got derailed, was in the 2020 Divisional Round when Bill O’Brien’s team gave up a 24-0 lead to the Kansas City Chiefs.

For all the greatness that made up O’Brien’s Houston Texans – DeShaun Watson, DeAndre Hopkins, Jadeveon Clowney, J.J. Watt – he was never able to overcome mediocrity. In many respects, Coach O’Brien most resembled the former Cincinnati Bengal’s head coach, Marvin Lewis. Both Lewis and O’Brien excelled at maintaining winning records, but never brought their respective franchises any lasting glory.

Part 2: Bill O’Brien: The General Manager

Technically, Bill O’Brien wasn’t the Texans’ “official” general manager until they bestowed him the title in January of 2020. However, his fingerprints and demands for certain players were in every transaction.

The Brock Osweiller signing should have been exactly the point in which the Texans fired O’Brien. Osweiller played only eight games for the Denver Broncos before signing a four-year $72 million contract in 2016, with O’Brien’s club. Even O’Brien discussed how the two, paired together, would lead to great success for the organization. Osweiller was quickly traded when his play did not add up to his worth, but O’Brien’s spending left a damaging hole in the Texan’s cap space. This hole only grew stronger as O’Brien was allowed to make further front office decisions.

In 2019 O’Brien let his once lauded over defensive end, Jadeveon Clowney, walk and then immediately sent two first round draft picks to Miami. The Texans received offensive lineman Laremy Tunsil and then decided to pay him $22 million per year. Tunsil was supposed to give DeShaun Watson, the all-pro quarterback for the Texans, extra protection. This failed. Watson remains one of the most pressured quarterbacks in the NFL. In addition it’s no surprise that after Clowney left, the Texans are ranked last against the run and 26th for most points allowed.

In his first move as the “official” general manager of the Texans, O’Brien traded his future Hall of Fame receiver, DeAndre Hopkins, to the Arizona Cardinals for a beat up running back, David Johnson, and a second-round pick. It was obvious which team won this trade. Johnson currently ranks 35th for yards per carry, but then again Johnson’s offensive line is atrocious (remember Watson is the most pressured quarterback in the NFL). Despite all these earth-shattering signings and trades, O’Brien wasn’t finished making his mark. He traded a second and fourth round pick to the Rams in order to acquire the nearly always banged up wide receiver, Brandin Cooks.

The general manager left to clean up Bill O’Brien’s mess will have an arduous time just to rebuild. The Texans have absolutely no cap space to sign players. Thanks to O’Brien’s dealings, his team spends the most per year on player salaries ($255million). The new GM will also be hindered trying to build through the draft as Miami holds the Texans’ first round draft picks and the Texans won’t pick until the third round.

Part Three: Bill O’Brien: The Man

Bill O’Brien advanced to the top of an organization through a strategy known as “failing up.” O’Brien successfully blamed Rick Smith, the general manager who was able to get Brock Osweiller off Houston’s books, for not providing him with adequate talent. It was reported the relationship between Rick Smith and Bill O’Brien was “toxic.” Smith would be shown the door at the end of the 2017 season.

Even the most ardent romances result in the most acrimonious divorces

Brian Gaine would then be the next general manager to run afoul of Czar O’Brien. This time it was reported that Gaine and O’Brien’s relationship had “eroded”. Gaine would be let go at the end of the 2019 season which is where O’Brien successfully “failed up” to become the Texans’ “official general manager.”

Brian Gaine was Billy O's guy, until he wasn't

Not only did O’Brien fail to get along with front office personnel but he also failed to have good relations with his players. In his “negotiations” with DeAndre Hopkins, which led to Hopkins’ trade, O’Brien thought it best to compare Hopkins to murderer Aaron Hernandez and then later made a joke about Hopkins’ “baby mamas [all] being around.” It’s not clear if ever insulting the other party personally is an intelligent negotiation strategy. In light of this information, it should come as no surprise that rumors are coming out that many Houston players have a “feeling of relief” after O’Brien’s departure.

Part Four: Conclusion

In every mob movie there is some cheesy line that suggests that business really is personal. Bill O’Brien makes that notion entirely true. Each of his moves – Osweiller, Hopkins, Clowney – was made through his own personal instincts. The football logic is hard to see because the football logic wasn’t there. The more alarming factor is how this rampage and malfeasance was able to get out of hand. Each person who attempted to rail O’Brien in (Smith and Gaine) were shown the door.

The Texans’ ownership, the last safeguard of a promising franchise, allowed O’Brien to turn a once promising franchise into a broke, cashless, dumpster fire of a team.

Shame on Bill O’Brien but even greater shame on Cal McNair for allowing this gross negligence to continue for far too long.

Sources

https://www.sbnation.com/nfl/2020/10/6/21503681/bill-obrien-texans-coach-fired

https://www.battleredblog.com/2017/12/30/16833736/aaron-wilson-obrien-smith-relationship-toxic

https://africa.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/30048456/the-texans-fired-bill-obrien-now-barnwell-strange-timing-rocky-tenure-houston-future

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